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The Web of Inclusion: Faculty Helping Faculty by Jodi Parks-Doyle โ€” book cover

The Web of Inclusion: Faculty Helping Faculty

by Jodi Parks-Doyle, Parks-Doyle
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Synopsis

The book contains black-and-white illustrations.

Aileen Kishi

This book highlights the 1994 proceedings of the National League for Nursing's Council of Associate Degree Programs. The book is divided into four parts. Part 1 focuses on the history of Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) education, the changes occurring in healthcare reform, and the future challenges facing educators. Part 2 focuses on new ways for faculty to collaborate and share expertise. Part 3 focuses on faculty change, methods to enhance learning opportunities and unique ways to empower students and faculty. Part 4 explores new settings to teach. The purposes are to clarify the direction and visions of ADN education in a time of change, ambiguity, and decreased resources in healthcare and nursing education and to highlight national and local strategies that reflect creativity, innovation, and excellence in ADN education. Although this book targets ADN directors and educators, it is also beneficial for graduate students, deans, and faculty in baccalaureate and higher nursing education who are interested in facilitating educational preparation for now emerging and future nursing practice roles. The format of the book, including a variety of pertinent and current references and a well-organized table of contents, makes it easy to read cover to cover or to pick and choose chapters of interest. The holistic concept of the Web of Inclusion is reflected in the illustration on the book's cover and in the theme of this book. Use of tables and figures to illustrate the theme of the chapters helps to present pertinent information in a concise and readable format. The visions for nursing education reform, ways in which faculty can collaborate and share expertise, opportunities for faculty tochange and embrace ambiguity, and a curriculum model to support differentiated practice roles in the community are pertinent for educators and administrators in all nursing programs to consider. This book is a valuable resource for nurse educators and administrators who are striving to prepare graduates to meet a variety of healthcare needs in a wide variety of settings. It provides some provocative food for thought and discussion on how nurse educators can rethink, retool, and leave behind what will not work in the future. This book is a valuable resource for graduate students to review and discuss in their nursing education courses. The contributors from the Council of Associate Degree Programs look at a variety of issues, trends, and solutions to capture their collective vision for nursing's future. This book is appropriate for individual or nursing education library purchase.

About the Author, Jodi Parks-Doyle

Bayles, Patricia, MN, RN (Butler Community Coll); Parks-Doyle, Jodi, EdD, RN (St Petersburg Junior Coll)

The contributors are nursing professionals from academic medical centers in the U.S. Institutions prominently represented include Kent State, West Georgia Coll, Univ of South Dakota, Butler Community Coll, and Xavier Univ.

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Editorials

From The Critics

Reviewer: Aileen Kishi, PhD, RN(University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing)
Description: This book highlights the 1994 proceedings of the National League for Nursing's Council of Associate Degree Programs. The book is divided into four parts. Part 1 focuses on the history of Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) education, the changes occurring in healthcare reform, and the future challenges facing educators. Part 2 focuses on new ways for faculty to collaborate and share expertise. Part 3 focuses on faculty change, methods to enhance learning opportunities and unique ways to empower students and faculty. Part 4 explores new settings to teach.
Purpose: The purposes are to clarify the direction and visions of ADN education in a time of change, ambiguity, and decreased resources in healthcare and nursing education and to highlight national and local strategies that reflect creativity, innovation, and excellence in ADN education.
Audience: Although this book targets ADN directors and educators, it is also beneficial for graduate students, deans, and faculty in baccalaureate and higher nursing education who are interested in facilitating educational preparation for now emerging and future nursing practice roles.
Features: The format of the book, including a variety of pertinent and current references and a well-organized table of contents, makes it easy to read cover to cover or to pick and choose chapters of interest. The holistic concept of the "Web of Inclusion" is reflected in the illustration on the book's cover and in the theme of this book. Use of tables and figures to illustrate the theme of the chapters helps to present pertinent information in a concise and readable format.
Assessment: The visions for nursing education reform, ways in which faculty can collaborate and share expertise, opportunities for faculty to change and embrace ambiguity, and a curriculum model to support differentiated practice roles in the community are pertinent for educators and administrators in all nursing programs to consider. This book is a valuable resource for nurse educators and administrators who are striving to prepare graduates to meet a variety of healthcare needs in a wide variety of settings. It provides some provocative food for thought and discussion on how nurse educators can "rethink, retool, and leave behind what will not work in the future." This book is a valuable resource for graduate students to review and discuss in their nursing education courses. The contributors from the Council of Associate Degree Programs look at a variety of issues, trends, and solutions to capture their collective vision for nursing's future. This book is appropriate for individual or nursing education library purchase.

Aileen Kishi

This book highlights the 1994 proceedings of the National League for Nursing's Council of Associate Degree Programs. The book is divided into four parts. Part 1 focuses on the history of Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) education, the changes occurring in healthcare reform, and the future challenges facing educators. Part 2 focuses on new ways for faculty to collaborate and share expertise. Part 3 focuses on faculty change, methods to enhance learning opportunities and unique ways to empower students and faculty. Part 4 explores new settings to teach. The purposes are to clarify the direction and visions of ADN education in a time of change, ambiguity, and decreased resources in healthcare and nursing education and to highlight national and local strategies that reflect creativity, innovation, and excellence in ADN education. Although this book targets ADN directors and educators, it is also beneficial for graduate students, deans, and faculty in baccalaureate and higher nursing education who are interested in facilitating educational preparation for now emerging and future nursing practice roles. The format of the book, including a variety of pertinent and current references and a well-organized table of contents, makes it easy to read cover to cover or to pick and choose chapters of interest. The holistic concept of the Web of Inclusion is reflected in the illustration on the book's cover and in the theme of this book. Use of tables and figures to illustrate the theme of the chapters helps to present pertinent information in a concise and readable format. The visions for nursing education reform, ways in which faculty can collaborate and share expertise, opportunities for faculty tochange and embrace ambiguity, and a curriculum model to support differentiated practice roles in the community are pertinent for educators and administrators in all nursing programs to consider. This book is a valuable resource for nurse educators and administrators who are striving to prepare graduates to meet a variety of healthcare needs in a wide variety of settings. It provides some provocative food for thought and discussion on how nurse educators can rethink, retool, and leave behind what will not work in the future. This book is a valuable resource for graduate students to review and discuss in their nursing education courses. The contributors from the Council of Associate Degree Programs look at a variety of issues, trends, and solutions to capture their collective vision for nursing's future. This book is appropriate for individual or nursing education library purchase.

5 Stars! from Doody

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1995
Publisher
Jones & Bartlett Learning, LLC
Pages
172
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780887376429

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